As Jim points out, the New York Times reports that "11 journalists in five countries [are] facing prosecution for printing some of the cartoons." Maybe I'm going blind, but for the life of me I can't figure out from the article what the five countries are.

I saw the references to journalists in Yemen and Jordan -- but what are the others? (The article mentions journalists in Egypt who published the cartoons, but stresses that they aren't in legal trouble, because they "reprinted [the cartoons] in October -- months before the conflict erupted -- to condemn the drawings." What am I missing?

The NYT article does not appear to enumerate all 11 journalists who are facing prosecution either (which would make sense given that all five countries are not enumerated). This can lead to major problems with newspapers using the NYT as a wire service -- for example, the Houston Chronicle's headline states "11 journalists face prosecution over cartoons."

The original source for the numbers appears to be this press release from the organization Reporters Without Borders:

http://www.rsf.org/article.php3?id_article=16487

It does not name the five countries in which journalists have been arrested, but it does name five countries in which publications have been shut down: Algeria, Morocco, Jordan, Yemen, Malaysia. Perhaps those are the same five countries?

A Saudi paper, Shams, published the cartoons about three weeks ago. The paper was shut down in the past couple of days. It's not certain whether those involved will face legal trouble--though there are calls for their trials.